Ingo Eichmann

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Ingo Eichmann (born April 20, 1901 in Ströhen ; † after 1969) was a German Gestapo officer and SS leader.

Life

Eichmann completed a commercial apprenticeship after attending school and from 1921 was employed by the Hamburg police force. There he attended a criminal investigation course from 1929 and was promoted to major in the security police. He was involved in the Kampfbund Roland , which wanted to infiltrate the police in Hamburg under the Nazis. Because of "National Socialist activities" his service with the police was terminated.

After the National Socialists came to power , Eichmann was able to resume his employment with the Hamburg police and was transferred to the Hamburg state police in May 1933. Under Detective Inspector Peter Kraus , he was a member of an investigation team that was involved in the police prosecution of communists and social democrats . From 1938 onwards, Eichmann, who was promoted to government councilor, headed the department for espionage and treason (Inspection 5) at the Hamburg State Police Headquarters and became deputy head of the Hamburg Gestapo .

Eichmann was a member of the NSDAP from 1933 ( membership number 3.093.348) and later joined the SS (SS number 310.196), in which he rose to SS-Sturmbannführer in October 1938 .

After the beginning of the Second World War , Eichmann took over the management of the Kiel Gestapo from Karl Haselbacher . In this role he carried out the arrest of opponents of the Nazi regime in Kiel who were listed in the A-card index . After a preparatory course by the security police in Pretzsch , he led a task force in Trondheim until September 1940 after the Wehrmacht attacked Norway . He then returned to his leadership post at the Kiel Gestapo, which he held until the end of July 1941. He then served as a section commander of the police in Hamburg-Altona until he was posted to Rennes in 1942 as the commander of the regulatory police .

After the end of the war, Eichmann was denazified as a fellow traveler in Hamburg . He repeatedly unsuccessfully returned to the Hamburg police force and received no pension.

literature

  • Gerhard Paul : State terror and social brutality. The Gestapo in Schleswig-Holstein. With the collaboration of Erich Koch. Results, Hamburg 1996, ISBN 3-87916-037-6 .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b c Gerhard Paul: State terror and social brutalization. The Gestapo in Schleswig-Holstein , Hamburg 1996, p. 101f.
  2. Ingo Eichmann at www.dws-xip.pl
  3. ^ Gerhard Paul: State terror and social brutality. The Gestapo in Schleswig-Holstein , Hamburg 1996, pp. 254f.